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Crushing on Crushers Why do intellectuals fall in love with dictators and totalitarians?
City Journal ^ | 19 May, 2017 | Theodore Dalrymple

Posted on 05/22/2017 11:15:32 AM PDT by MtnClimber

Imprisoned serial killers of women are often the object of marriage proposals from women who know nothing of them except their criminal record. This curious phenomenon indicates the depths to which self-deception can sink in determining human action. The women making such offers presumably believe that an essential core of goodness subsists in the killers and that they are uniquely the ones to bring it to the surface. They thereby also distinguish themselves from other women, whose attitude to serial killers is more conventional and unthinkingly condemnatory. They thus see further and deeper, and feel more strongly, than their conventional sisters. By contrast, they show no particular interest in petty, or pettier, criminals. Something similar can be noted in the attitude of at least some intellectuals toward dictators, especially if those dictators claim to be in pursuit of a utopian vision. Paul Hollander, professor emeritus of sociology at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, has long had an interest in political deception and self-deception—not surprising in someone with first-hand experience of both the Nazis and the Communists in his native Hungary. In 1981, he published his classic study of Western intellectuals who traveled, mainly on severely guided tours, to Communist countries, principally Stalin’s Russia, Mao’s China, and Castro’s Cuba, and returned with glowing accounts of the new (and better) worlds under construction there. The contrast between their accounts and reality would have been funny had reality itself not been so terrible. In From Benito Mussolini to Hugo Chavez, Hollander turns his attention to intellectuals’ views of a wider range of dictators and authoritarian leaders.

(Excerpt) Read more at city-journal.org ...


TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: dictators; intellectuals

1 posted on 05/22/2017 11:15:32 AM PDT by MtnClimber
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To: MtnClimber

A book review of: From Benito Mussolini to Hugo Chavez: Intellectuals and a Century of Political Hero Worship, by Paul Hollander (Cambridge University Press, 338 pp


2 posted on 05/22/2017 11:16:00 AM PDT by MtnClimber (For photos of Colorado scenery and wildlife, click on my screen name for my FR home page.)
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To: MtnClimber
They're not intellectuals, they just say they are constantly.
3 posted on 05/22/2017 11:19:13 AM PDT by Trillian
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To: MtnClimber
Proof that Liberals LOVE Murderers.


4 posted on 05/22/2017 11:20:29 AM PDT by Diogenesis ("When a crime is unpunished, the world is unbalanced.")
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To: MtnClimber

5 posted on 05/22/2017 11:26:14 AM PDT by Fiddlstix (Warning! This Is A Subliminal Tagline! Read it at your own risk!(Presented by TagLines R US))
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To: MtnClimber

How very true this is;
Just a week ago, I learned about the case of Daniela Greene, a ex-FBI translator who married Denis Cupert, an ISIS terrorist she had been assigned in investigate. She has since realized ‘her mistake’, and fled Syria after only a month of wedded bliss.


6 posted on 05/22/2017 11:28:18 AM PDT by lee martell
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To: MtnClimber

Why? “The enemy of my enemy is my friend”, and the Conservative Right is their designated enemy. As time passes, I see ever more that their imperative is to destroy the Right by all means available - even if that means siding with those who would destroy the Left at first chance.


7 posted on 05/22/2017 11:50:59 AM PDT by ctdonath2 (It's not "white privilege", it's "Puritan work ethic". Behavior begets consequences.)
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To: MtnClimber

Why do intellectuals fall in love with dictators and totalitarians?

Probably because that is the most efficient form of government.
No opposition, no argument, no debate, no alternative...BUT
It sure ain’t pretty!!


8 posted on 05/22/2017 12:20:50 PM PDT by GoldenPup
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To: GoldenPup

They get off on prosecuting and molding minds. Also their feminine inadequate side has a dark prostitution wish agenda. These women sending love letters to criminals do not see something good in them, they make it up like they put on themselves make up. These women have a wish to express their whore shadow sides just like the absolute stupid male side is attracted to
free islamic violence.


9 posted on 05/22/2017 12:39:45 PM PDT by JudgemAll (Democrats Fed. job-security Whorocracy & hate:hypocrites must be gay like us or be tested/crucifiedc)
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To: MtnClimber
I'll read anything that Dalrymple writes, even if it's just a book review, and it it's by Paul Hollander it's probably not just a book. Hollander is the author of the remarkable The End of Commitment: Intellectuals, Revolutionaries, and Political Morality in the Twentieth Century, a book that details why Communist True Believers became disenchanted, what tore their blindfolds off, and what happened to them afterwards. Highly recommended.

I just bought this one - Kindle One-Touch is the devil's tool - and will take pleasure in reading it.

There is a great deal of difference between an intellectual and an intellectual celebrity, that latter term being almost self-contradictory and subsuming such characters as Sartre, Foucault, Chomsky, and Shaw, all of whom clung or continue to cling to their abstract understandings in the face of clearly contraindicative real-world evidence. Not so for Bertrand Russell, an early admirer of the Soviets who went to see for himself and changed his mind immediately thereafter. Anyone can be wrong, but to continue to be wrong about pain being an illusion after the rock falls on your foot is not an example of intellect, but of vanity and stubbornness. And there is no bigger a case of vanity and stubbornness than in an intellectual celebrity.

It does not take an intellectual to be attracted to Big Ideas, as any chance acquaintance with your run-of-the-mill coffee-house Marxist will attest. Nor does it take any particular mental horsepower to discard contrary evidence; what that takes is laziness and emotional fervor. Certain intellectuals have an unpleasant habit of parking their intellects in the nearest Handicapped spot rather than chip away at a cherished theory. What remains is only the celebrity, and it's a pretty sad sight.

10 posted on 05/22/2017 12:54:23 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: MtnClimber

Love of power.


11 posted on 05/22/2017 12:56:28 PM PDT by mulligan
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To: MtnClimber

Probably for the same reason some here will opine that America needs a Pinochet type of dictator. Or that the Generals should take over. It’s a childish way of thinking.


12 posted on 05/22/2017 1:08:21 PM PDT by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up.)
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To: lee martell

Oh that translator who fell in love with an isis guy is a great example.


13 posted on 05/22/2017 1:31:13 PM PDT by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up.)
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To: MtnClimber

If you have a big political idea and are frustrated, sooner or later you may start to like foreign strongmen.


14 posted on 05/22/2017 1:37:33 PM PDT by x
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To: MtnClimber

Regardless of intelligence, you have to be predisposed to think that force is okay to get people to do what you want.

We all have a preclivity to think this because we know force does often get compliance in a civilized society. There’s usually too much at risk personally not to comply.

A dictator/totalitarian is just a type of leader running a type of society. So it is an acceptable way to get compliance of people usually without too much trouble. The intellectual rationalizes this to be okay because “it works” for the large part.


15 posted on 05/22/2017 1:39:50 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man ( Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: MtnClimber

Intellectuals fall in love with totolitarian states and leaders because they are the only forms of government that could possibly try to implement their idiotic theories and nostrums on the victims who want nothing to do with them.


16 posted on 05/22/2017 2:26:12 PM PDT by WMarshal (President Trump, a president keeping his promises to the American people. It feels like winning.)
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To: DesertRhino

In the case of Pinochet, he was asked to do so by the House of Deputies and the courts while Allende was doing his power grab and bringing in enforcers from Cuba and East Germany. It was also found that Allende was on Brezhnev’s payroll. Pinochet was reluctant at first and they had to plead him to take action. Chile was just a few steps shy of becoming a Soviet satellite when Pinochet finally acted. History lesson.


17 posted on 05/22/2017 2:26:34 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (The Democratic Party is now the operational arm of the CPUSA)
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